This article originally appeared in
FreePress.org.
As a legal noose appears to be tightening
around the Bush/Cheney/Rove inner circle, a shocking government report
shows the floor under the legitimacy of their alleged election to
the White House is crumbling.
The latest critical confirmation of key indicators that the election
of 2004 was stolen comes in an extremely powerful, penetrating report
from the General Accounting Office that has gotten virtually no mainstream
media coverage.
The government's lead investigative agency is known for its general
incorruptibility and its thorough, in-depth analyses. Its concurrence
with assertions widely dismissed as "conspiracy theories"
adds crucial new weight to the case that Team Bush has no legitimate
business being in the White House.
Nearly a year ago, senior Judiciary Committee Democrat John Conyers
(D-MI) asked the GAO to investigate electronic voting machines as
they were used during the November 2, 2004 presidential election.
The request came amidst widespread complaints in Ohio and elsewhere
that often shocking irregularities defined their performance.
According to CNN, the U.S. House Judiciary Committee received "more
than 57,000 complaints" following Bush's alleged re-election.
Many such concerns were memorialized under oath in a series of sworn
statements and affidavits in public hearings and investigations conducted
in Ohio by the Free Press and other election protection organizations.
The non-partisan GAO report has now found that, "some of [the]
concerns about electronic voting machines have been realized and have
caused problems with recent elections, resulting in the loss and miscount
of votes."
The United States is the only major democracy that allows private
partisan corporations to secretly count and tabulate the votes with
proprietary non-transparent software. Rev. Jesse Jackson, among others,
has asserted that "public elections must not be conducted on
privately-owned machines." The CEO of one of the most crucial
suppliers of electronic voting machines, Warren O'Dell of Diebold,
pledged before the 2004 campaign to deliver Ohio and thus the presidency
to George W. Bush.
Bush's official margin of victory in Ohio was just 118,775 votes out
of more than 5.6 million cast. Election protection advocates argue
that O'Dell's statement still stands as a clear sign of an effort,
apparently successful, to steal the White House.
Among other things, the GAO confirms that:
1. Some electronic voting machines "did not encrypt cast ballots
or system audit logs, and it was possible to alter both without being
detected." In other words, the GAO now confirms that electronic
voting machines provided an open door to flip an entire vote count.
More than 800,000 votes were cast in Ohio on electronic voting machines,
some seven times Bush's official margin of victory.
2. "It was possible to alter the files that define how a ballot
looks and works so that the votes for one candidate could be recorded
for a different candidate." Numerous sworn statements and affidavits
assert that this did happen in Ohio 2004.
3. "Vendors installed uncertified versions of voting system software
at the local level." Falsifying election results without leaving
any evidence of such an action by using altered memory cards can easily
be done, according to the GAO.
4. The GAO also confirms that access to the voting network was easily
compromised because not all digital recording electronic voting systems
(DREs) had supervisory functions password-protected, so access to
one machine provided access to the whole network. This critical finding
confirms that rigging the 2004 vote did not require a "widespread
conspiracy" but rather the cooperation of a very small number
of operatives with the power to tap into the networked machines and
thus change large numbers of votes at will. With 800,000 votes cast
on electronic machines in Ohio, flipping the number needed to give
Bush 118,775 could be easily done by just one programmer.
5. Access to the voting network was also compromised by repeated use
of the same user IDs combined with easily guessed passwords. So even
relatively amateur hackers could have gained access to and altered
the Ohio vote tallies.
6. The locks protecting access to the system were easily picked and
keys were simple to copy, meaning, again, getting into the system
was an easy matter.
7. One DRE model was shown to have been networked in such a rudimentary
fashion that a power failure on one machine would cause the entire
network to fail, re-emphasizing the fragility of the system on which
the Presidency of the United States was decided.
8. GAO identified further problems with the security protocols and
background screening practices for vendor personnel, confirming still
more easy access to the system.
In essence, the GAO study makes it clear that no bank, grocery store
or mom & pop chop shop would dare operate its business on a computer
system as flimsy, fragile and easily manipulated as the one on which
the 2004 election turned.
The GAO findings are particularly damning when set in the context
of an election run in Ohio by a Secretary of State simultaneously
working as co-chair of the Bush-Cheney campaign. Far from what election
theft skeptics have long asserted, the GAO findings confirm that the
electronic network on which 800,000 Ohio votes were cast was vulnerable
enough to allow a a tiny handful of operatives -- or less -- to turn
the whole vote count using personal computers operating on relatively
simple software.
The GAO documentation flows alongside other crucial realities surrounding
the 2004 vote count. For example:
-
The exit polls showed
Kerry winning in Ohio, until an unexplained last minute shift gave
the election to Bush. Similar definitive shifts also occurred in
Iowa, Nevada and New Mexico, a virtual statistical impossibility.
- A few weeks prior to the election, an
unauthorized former ES&S voting machine company employee, was
caught on the ballot-making machine in Auglaize County.
-
Election officials
in Mahoning County now concede that at least 18 machines visibly
transferred votes for Kerry to Bush. Voters who pushed Kerry's name
saw Bush's name light up, again and again, all day long. Officials
claim the problems were quickly solved, but sworn statements and
affidavits say otherwise. They confirm similar problems in Franklin
County (Columbus). Kerry's margins in both counties were suspiciously
low.
-
In Gahanna Ward 1B,
at a fundamentalist church, a so-called "electronic transfer
glitch" gave Bush nearly 4000 extra votes when only 638 people
voted at that polling place. The tally was allegedly corrected,
but remains infamous as the "loaves and fishes" vote count.
-
In Miami County, at
1:43am after Election Day, with the county's central tabulator reporting
100% of the vote – 19,000 more votes mysteriously arrived; 13,000
were for Bush at the same percentage as prior to the additional
votes, a virtual statistical impossibility.
-
In Cleveland, large,
entirely implausible vote totals turned up for obscure third party
candidates in traditional Democratic African-American wards. Vote
counts in neighboring wards showed virtually no votes for those
candidates, with 90% going instead for Kerry.
- In response to official information
requests, Shelby and other counties admit to having discarded key
records and equipment before any recount could take place.
-
In a conference call
with Rev. Jackson, Attorney Cliff Arnebeck, Attorney Bob Fitrakis
and others, John Kerry confirmed that he lost every precinct in
New Mexico that had a touchscreen voting machine. The losses had
no correlation with ethnicity, social class or traditional party
affiliation – only with the fact that touchscreen machines were
used.
-
In a public letter, Rep. Conyers has stated that
"by and large, when it comes to a voting machine, the average
voter is getting a lemon - the Ford Pinto of voting technology.
We must demand better."
But the GAO report now confirms that electronic voting
machines as deployed in 2004 were in fact perfectly engineered to allow
a very small number of partisans with minimal computer skills and equipment
to shift enough votes to put George W. Bush back in the White House.
Given the growing body of evidence, it appears increasingly clear that's
exactly what happened.
Bob Fitrakis & Harvey Wasserman are co-authors of How the
GOP Stole America’s 2004 Election & is Rigging 2008, available
via http://freepress.org and http://harveywasserman.com. Their What
Happened in Ohio, with Steve Rosenfeld, will be published in Spring,
2006, by New Press.
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